17 May 2020

John Frederick La Trobe Bateman in Mottram in Longdendale, Tameside, Greater Manchester


'JOHN FREDERICK LA TROBE BATEMAN
(1810-1889)
Pioneer - Water Engineer Extraordinaire

Brought water to the taps of Tameside and Manchester by constructing
the six mile long chain of Longdendale Reservoirs from 1848.

At the time these became the largest reservoirs constructed
in the world and Europe's first major conservation scheme.

Completed in 1877, these waters have never run dry.
This plaque is located on the deepest air shaft over
Mottram Tunnel measured at some 200ft below.'

'La Trobe' was Bateman's mother's surname.  He worked on many water supply systems in many parts of the country, and also in Buenos Aries, Naples, Constantinople and Colombo. His Wikipedia entry says 'In 1855 he wrote a paper for the British Association, On the present state of our Knowledge on the Supply of Water to Towns, enunciating the nature of the problem, outlining previous measures, enumerating sources from which towns could be supplied, and discussing their merits. In 1865 he published a pamphlet On the Supply of Water to London from the Sources of the River Severn, a scheme he designed and surveyed at his own expense. A royal commission in 1868 reported in favour of the project, a gravitation scheme to convey 230 million gallons of water a day to the city.'

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